Warren-based trio Six Star General return to action with Spaceship to Planet Cookie (out this week on 75 or Less records), their fifth release since forming back in early 2004. Spaceship stays the course and follows the SSG blueprint of succinct and sludgy rock previously found on last year's Already On One and the 2006 releases Ice Machine and their self-titled debut. Planet Cookie is fuzzy and unrefined, and these guys wouldn't have it otherwise, with guitarist Kyle Jackson utilizing plenty of wah-wah and once again wearing out his Crybaby pedal throughout the 13-track, 28-minute disc. Jackson and bassist Mark MacDougall share the same shredded larynx that recalls Eric Bachmann's early days with Archers of Loaf, and drummer Jason Almeida ably complements the ruckus, underlining the tight-knit bond between the three childhood friends. "Jay and I met in the fifth grade and Mark grew up around the corner from me," Jackson told me earlier this week while chatting up their CD release show at Jake's this weekend.

I asked Jackson and MacDougall about the recording process five albums later. "Our goal for each album is to make sure we're well-rehearsed and knock them out in a few takes," Jackson said. "We start with a basic bassline and build off of it."

"Everyone contributes their own ideas and once it all seems to click, we add some words and move on," MacDougall noted. "Most songs we leave under two minutes in length, other times we take two shorter ones and combine them. We've recorded all our records live in the studio, and only overdub the vocals. It gives the record a raw sound that we like."

The band clearly has an affinity for SST-era bands like the Minutemen and Dinosaur Jr, apparent on songs such as "Something Ripped" and "Fixin' the Fan with Bo." Eleven of the 13 tracks clock in at under three minutes, and SSG boasts having never played the same set twice.

"For a band like us that doesn't really tour because of family and job obligations, playing out locally two or three times per month can get routine," Jackson said, "so we're always working on new material and change up our live sets as much as possible. There is an obvious shortage of official venues, but no shortage of good bands to play with in Providence, and even though each band has their own style, we all understand playing music is not really going to pay the bills. If you have that in common, you tend to see eye to eye on many other things."

Six Star General will be recording some live gigs in anticipation of a new release, as well as an EP of new material by summer 2009. And they may be pulling out a few of the covers found on their 2007 B-side/outtakes release, Sick Stars Sister Cyst, including retooled tracks from CCR to Butthole Surfers to Jonathan Richman.

"We'll be playing most of the new record with only two breaks," MacDougall said, "loud, fast and perfect for people who love rock and roll but have short attention spans.

Local heroes, ’09 edition The Rhode Island music community flourished in 2009, with new full-lengths from the Coming Weak, California Smile, and the pride of Cranston West and official big-leaguers Monty Are I, who released Break Through the Silence in September.

Pouring it on Like most of us around here, 75orLess Records founder and Six Star General frontman Mark "Slick" MacDougall would like to put 2009 to bed.

Newport’s rock royalty If 75orLess Records CEO (and Six Star General bassist) Mark MacDougall decided to host an East Bay Desert Sessions, the diePods would be the 3 am headliner.

High tide Newport’s Cliffs & Bangers bring their lightning-rod brand of surf-rock to the 201 this weekend behind their spring ’09 release Short Tracks No Brakes , and the downtown crowd better be prepared for some hair-flailing headbanging.

The DIY way Local rocker Mark MacDougall has come up with his own way of circumventing the freefall of the recording industry.

Write. Record. Gig. Repeat. The Warren-based Propellers are yet another notable band putting in work for the Warren-based label 75OrLess Rec-ords, and their sophomore release, The Propellers: 2 , offers a gradual growth from their self-titled debut.